Word: cased
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...case of undergraduate ushers, ticket takers, members of the football squads and coaches, and in a very few cases where special permission has been given, this agreement is waived. In all other cases it must be strictly complied with. Failure to comply with it may render the applicant ineligible to receive tickets thereafter. Even with this restriction, it is necessary every year to out down to one seat each the allotment of many graduates who have applied...
...order to avoid any misunderstanding, the announcement is made that men who usher at the Yale game will in all cases receive the full number of tickets for which they have applied. The rule regarding personal occupancy of seats will, of course, be inoperative in the case of ushers. Any man in the University is entitled to apply for an ushership, which entails free admission to the game. More men are needed and application may be made before Wednesday of this week at Leavitt & Peirce's, the H. A. A., or the Phillips Brooks House. The full list of ushers...
Every faction has its duty to the public at large; no group of men have the right, as in the case of the miners, to starve and freeze the whole population of the country. But the public has its own responsibilities in regard to every unit in its composition; it must prove to every faction that it stands for fair play even above and against its own interests. When, and only when, the confidence of labor in the public has been won, will we see a tendency towards arbitration in wage and working-hour disputes...
...narrowness. With a length of 162 feet it is only 52 feet wide. Inasmuch as the Brooklyn Ice Palace was found too narrow last fall in the game with Yale, there is some doubt as to whether the important games can be played on the rink in case that there is available out-door...
...hands of an autocratic government, universal military training may perhaps justly be regarded as dangerous and apt to lead to "militarism." In the case of a democracy like ours, the "danger is non-existent. P. R. CHANDLER...